(a) What is the best coefficient of performance for a heat pump that has a hot reservoir temperature of 5 0.0 ° C and a cold reservoir temperature of – 2 0.0 ° C ? (b) How much heat transfer occurs into the warm environment if 3.60 × 10 7 J of work ( 1 0.0 kW ⋅ h ) is put into it? (c) If the cost of this work input is 1 0.0 cent / kW ⋅ h , haw does its cost compare with the direct heat transfer achieved by burning natural gas at a cost of 85.0 cents per therm. (A therm is a common unit of energy for natural gas and equals 1.055 × 10 8 J .)
(a) What is the best coefficient of performance for a heat pump that has a hot reservoir temperature of 5 0.0 ° C and a cold reservoir temperature of – 2 0.0 ° C ? (b) How much heat transfer occurs into the warm environment if 3.60 × 10 7 J of work ( 1 0.0 kW ⋅ h ) is put into it? (c) If the cost of this work input is 1 0.0 cent / kW ⋅ h , haw does its cost compare with the direct heat transfer achieved by burning natural gas at a cost of 85.0 cents per therm. (A therm is a common unit of energy for natural gas and equals 1.055 × 10 8 J .)
(a) What is the best coefficient of performance for a heat pump that has a hot reservoir temperature of
5
0.0
°
C
and a cold reservoir temperature of
–
2
0.0
°
C
? (b) How much heat transfer occurs into the warm environment if
3.60
×
10
7
J
of work
(
1
0.0
kW
⋅
h
)
is put into it? (c) If the cost of this work input is
1
0.0
cent
/
kW
⋅
h
, haw does its cost compare with the direct heat transfer achieved by burning natural gas at a cost of 85.0 cents per therm. (A therm is a common unit of energy for natural gas and equals
1.055
×
10
8
J
.)
A 3.5-kg block is pushed 2.9 m up a vertical wall with constant speed by a constant force of magnitude F applied at an angle of 0 = 30° with the horizontal, as shown in the figure below. If the coefficient of kinetic friction between block and wall is 0.30, determine the following.
(a) the work done by F
J
(b) the work done by the force of gravity
]
(c) the work done by the normal force between block and wall
J
(d) By how much does the gravitational potential energy increase during the block's motion?
]
Physics different from a sea breeze from a land breeze
File Preview Design a capacitor for a special purpose.
After graduating from medical school you and a friend take a three hour cruise to celebrate and end up
stranded on an island. While looking for food, a spider falls on your friend giving them a heart attack.
Recalling your physics, you realize you can build a make-shift defibrillator by constructing a capacitor from
materials on the boat and charging it using the boat's battery. You know that the capacitor must hold 100
J of energy and be at 1000 V (fortunately this is an electric boat which has batteries that are 1000 V) to
work. You decide to construct the capacitor by tightly sandwiching a single layer of Saran wrap between
sheets of aluminum foil. You read the Saran wrap box and fortunately they tell you that it has a thickness
0.01 mm and dielectric constant of 2.3. The Saran wrap and foil are 40 cm wide and very long. How long
is the final capacitor you build that saves your friend?
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, physics and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.
The Second Law of Thermodynamics: Heat Flow, Entropy, and Microstates; Author: Professor Dave Explains;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MrwW4w2nAMc;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY